: Tintin investigates the suspicious death of art dealer Mr. Fourcart. This leads him to a conspiracy involving a religious teacher and spiritual leader named Endaddine Akass , who uses a "modern art" movement called "Alph-Art" as a front for a massive forgery operation.
: While never officially confirmed in the sketches, notes suggest that Endaddine Akass was intended to be Tintin's longtime nemesis, Rastapopoulos , in disguise. The Unfinished Ending The book ends on a literal and metaphorical cliffhanger. Tintin and Alph-Art (The Adventures of Tintin 24)
is the 24th and final volume of The Adventures of Tintin , left unfinished by its creator, Hergé, upon his death in 1983. It was posthumously published in 1986 as a collection of Hergé's rough sketches and notes. Story and Setting : Tintin investigates the suspicious death of art dealer Mr